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Mechanisms---Privatization

The marketization of today’s schools through school choice leads to loss of critical thought, increased surveillance, and broader inequality in society


Hill 09

Dave Hill is Research Professor (Emeritus) in Education at Anglia Ruskin University, Chelmsford, England, and also Visiting Professor at the Kapodistrian and National University of Athens, Greece, and in the Social Policy Research Centre at Middlesex University, London.Ravi Kumar teaches in the Department of Sociology at South Asian University, New Delhi, India, and is associated with the Global Centre for Advanced Studies as part of its faculty. He was previously a Visiting Faculty member at Anglia Ruskin University and taught at Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi. 2009 (“Global Neoliberalism and Education and its Consequences”, Accessed 7/1)


Markets have exacerbated existing inequalities. There is considerable data on how poor schools have, by and large, become poorer (in terms of relative education results and in terms of total income) and how rich schools (in the same terms) have become richer. Whitty, Power, and Halpin (1998) examined the effects of the introduction of quasi-markets into education systems in the United States, Sweden, England and Wales, Austrhalia, and New Zealand. Their book is a review of the research evidence. Their conclusion is that one Neoliberalism and Its Impacts 15 of the results of marketizing education is that increasing “parental choice” of schools, and/or setting up new types of schools, in effect increases school choice of parents and their children and thereby sets up or exacerbates racialized school hierarchies. In the United Kingdom, for example, while in government between 1979 and 1997, the Conservatives established a competitive market for ‘consumers’ (children and their parents) by setting up new types of schools in addition to the local (state, i.e., public) primary school or the local secondary comprehensive school. Thus they introduced new types of school such as City Technology Colleges and Grant Maintained schools, schools that removed themselves from the control of Local (democratically elected) Authorities. And to con- fi rm this creation of a “quasi-” market in school choice, they extended the “parental choice” of schools—letting parents, in effect, apply for any school anywhere in the country. Not only that, but the Conservative governments also stopped redistributive, positive discrimination funding for schools. Decisions about funding were substantially taken out of the hands of the democratically elected local education authorities (LEAs) by the imposition of per capita funding for pupils/school students. So students in poor/disadvantaged areas in an LEA would receive the same per capita funding as “rich kids.” Furthermore, this funding rose or fell according to intake numbers of pupils/students, itself affected by henceforth compulsorily publicized “league table” performance according to pupil/student performance at various ages on SATs (Student Assessment Tasks) and 16+ examination results. (This “equality of treatment” contrasts dramatically with the attempts, prior to the 1988 Education Reform Act, of many LEAs to secure more “equality of opportunity” by spending more on those with greatest needs—a power partially restored in one of its social democratic polices by the New Labour government following its election in 1997). The result of this “school choice” is that inequalities between schools have increased because in many cases the “parental choice” of schools has become the “schools’ choice” of the most desirable parents and children—and rejection of others.Sink schools” have become more “sinklike” as more favored schools have picked the children they think are likely to be “the cream of the crop.” Where selection exists the sink schools just sink further and the privileged schools just become more privileged. Teachers in sink schools are publicly pilloried, and, under “New Labour” the schools are “named and shamed” as “Failing Schools,” and, in some cases either reopened with a new “superhead” as a “Fresh Start School” (with dismissals of “failing” teachers), or shut down (see, for example, Whitty, Power, and Halpin, 1998). These Conservative government policies are classic manifestations of neoliberal, free-market ideology, including the transference of a substantial percentage of funding and of powers away from LEAs to “consumers” (in this case, schools). “Ostensibly, at least, these represent a “rolling back” of central and local government’s infl uence on what goes on in schools (Troyna, 1995, p.141). 16 Dave Hill and Ravi Kumar Conservative government/ Party policy in England and Wales remained and remains a mixture of neoliberalism and neoconservatism. An aspect of its neoconservatism is its “equiphobia”—fear of equality (Myers in Troyna, 1995; cf. Hill, 1997a), its hostility to agencies or apparatuses thought to be involved in promoting equality and equal opportunities—such as (democratically elected) LEAs (Gamble, 1988; Hill, 1997a, 1999, 2001b). New Labour’s education policy modifi es and extends Radical Right principles and anti-egalitarianism (Hill, 1999, 2001b). Its policy for more competitiveness (between schools, between parents, between pupils/students, and between teachers) and selection (by schools and by universities) are a continuation, indeed, an extension, of most of the structural aspects of the 1988 Conservative Education Reform Act, in terms of the macrostructure and organization of schooling. The Radical Right principle of competition between schools (which results in an increasing inequality between schools) and the principle of devolving more and more fi nancial control to schools through local management of schools are all in keeping with preceding Conservative opposition to comprehensive education and to the powers of LEAs, as are the ever- increasing provision of new types of school and attacks on “mixed-ability teaching” and the increased emphasis on the role/rule of capital in education. New Labour’s neoconservatism, echoing that of the Conservatives, also perpetuates the “strong state” within the “free economy” (i.e., the deregulated, low-taxed, competitive, ultra-capital-friendly economy). Governments in countries such as Britain, the United States, Australia, and New Zealand have marketized their school systems. Racialized social class patterns of inequality have increased. And at the level of university entry, the (racialized) class-based hierarchicalization of universities is exacerbated by “top-up fees” for entry to elite universities, pricing the poor out of the system, or at least into the lower divisions of higher education. And, to control the state apparatuses of education, such marketization is controlled by heavy systems of surveillance and accountability (Hill and Rosskam, 2009). Thus, with respect to the United States, Pauline Lipman (2001) notes, George W. Bush’s “blueprint” to “reform” education, released in February 2001 (No Child Left Behind) (Bush, 2001), crystallizes key neoliberal, neo-conservative, and business-oriented education policies. The main components of Bush’s plan are mandatory, high-stakes testing and vouchers and other supports for privatizing schools. Lipman (2001) continues, The major aspects of this Agenda and Policy are . . . standards, accountability, and regulation of schools, teachers and students and an explicit linkage of corporate interests with educational practices and goals. Mathison and Ross (2002) detail the many recommended interventions, both direct (the business agenda in education) and indirect (the business Neoliberalism and Its Impacts 17 agenda for education) by capital in the U.S. environment of corporate takeovers of schools and universities: In K–12 schools some examples are school choice plans (voucher systems, charter schools), comprehensive school designs based on business principles (such as economies of scale, standardization, cost effi ciency, production line strategies), back to basics curricula, teacher merit pay, and strong systems of accountability. In universities some examples are the demand for common general education and core curricula (often not developed or supported by faculty), demands for common tests of student core knowledge, standardized tests of knowledge and skill for professional areas, promotion of “classic” education, and elimination of “new” content areas such as women’s studies, post-modernism, and multiculturalism. On an international level, diktats by the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and other agencies of international capital have actually resulted in the actual disappearance of formerly free nationally funded schooling and other education (and welfare, public utility) services (Hill, 2006a, c). One of the “fast growing economies” in the world, India has principally been doing away with the agenda of equality in education. While the discourse of “choice” has legitimized private education at all levels, those sections which lack purchasing power are being systematically deprived of equal access to good quality education (Kumar, 2006a, Kumar and Paul, 2006). Government schools are the only option left for them.


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